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"We’re never leaving," Rep. Susan Concannon, R-Beloit, told reporters as she left the House chamber a few minutes after midnight.

When the House vote began, the count stood at 59-59. Bills require 63 votes to pass and once it became clear it could not reach that threshold, lawmakers began changing their yes votes to no.

House Majority Leader Don Hineman, R-Dighton, would not comment after the failed vote.

In the Senate, Democrats joined with moderate Republicans and some members of Senate Republican leadership to move the bill across the line, but the vote total was short of the 27 votes that would have been needed to override a veto by Brownback.

"We need to get Kansas back on a somewhat structurally balanced budget," said Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning, R-Overland Park.

Denning said the bill could make the state budget "semi-stable."

"At the end of the day, we’ve got to start some place. It’s the 102nd day of the session, people (are) wondering what the heck is going on," said Sen. Tom Holland, D-Baldwin City.

The bill the Senate passed Tuesday would have raised more than $1.2 billion over the next two fiscal years by ending Brownback’s tax exemption for roughly 330,000 business owners and boosting income tax rates.

It would have restored a third income tax bracket eliminated in Brownback’s 2012 tax cuts.

Tax rates would have begun to increase this year. The rates would have been phased in, rising first to 2.9 percent, 4.9 percent and 5.2 percent.

By tax year 2018, the tax rates would have risen to and remained at 3.1 percent for the lowest bracket, 5.25 percent for the middle rate and 5.7 for the highest rate.

The Sales Tax and Revenue Bond Financing Act, referred to as STAR bonds, would also have been extended under the proposal.

Kansas faces a budget shortfall of roughly $900 million over two years. That does not include any additional education spending that lawmakers may approve as part of a new school funding formula.

"The reality is we need a massive tax increase to pay for the addition in school finance and structurally fix our budget," said Senate Vice President Jeff Longbine, R-Emporia.

Sen. Ty Masterson, R-Andover, vented his frustrations about the tax increases and how it would impact the state’s budget during the floor debate.

"I’m at a loss," he said.

Sen. Dennis Pyle, R-Hiawatha, held up a $100 bill during a speech against the bill. Saying the cash represented property, he argued that when lawmakers take more property, they crumble people’s rights.

"It’s going to be a very burdensome tax increase," Pyle said.

The House debated a similar bill a week ago, but voted it down, 53-68. Most Democrats and many conservative Republicans did not support the measure.

House Bill 2067 was the first tax bill to pass a legislative chamber since February.

Neither the House nor the Senate had been able to pass a tax bill since House Bill 2178 early in the session. The bill would have raised about $1.1 billion over two years, less than the plan Monday.

Brownback vetoed HB 2178. An effort to override his veto fell three votes short in the Senate.